Thank you. Good morning, everyone. I'm Kannan Venkateshwar, and I lead the North American Cable Telecom and Media Research effort here at Barclays. I'm sorry we had to make this event virtual last minute, given all the travel disruptions, but I did want to acknowledge all the work of my corporate access team, who've been very busy in the last 24 hours, setting all this up to work seamlessly. Thank you, Jamie and team. I'm really happy to have here with me, Pascal Desroches, CFO, AT&T. Pascal, great to have you, and thanks for doing this. Before we get started, I think you have to go through the safe harbor statements.
Sure thing. Good morning, Kannan, and it's a pleasure to be with you. Before I begin, I want to call your attention to our safe harbor statement, which says: Some of my comments may be forward-looking, and therefore subject to risk and uncertainties, and results may differ materially. Also, we're in the quiet period for the FCC Spectrum Auction 113, and during this period, I'm unable to comment at all about the upcoming auction. With that, Kannan, we can get started.
Maybe we could start with mobility, Pascal, and just the overall operating environment across the wireless business and address some of the questions that, you know, everybody has top of mind. Seems like volumes have been a big priority over the last few years, and at present, pricing based on, you know, your guidance, as well as what others like Verizon have said, it seems there is this debate about whether this is a race to the bottom or being a new normal, especially if volumes don't grow. Could you talk a little bit about the ARPU trajectory from here and how you could maintain your service revenue growth trajectory in case ARPU was to remain in the present trend line for some time?
Sure thing, Kannan. I think what's really helpful to keep in mind is 2025 was a competitive environment, right? You look at 2025, we grew wireless service revenues a touch over 3%. We grew our broadband revenues mid-teens, and our ARPU was up modestly. I think it's a reflection of the, you know, candidly, how we have been going to market and what you could expect from us as you look ahead. We are in a unique position in that we are significantly expanding our fiber and fixed wireless footprint. We were the first to really highlight the fact that we're gonna customers want to buy on a converged basis, and we have been driving convergence for some time, and our opportunities for convergence are gonna go up significantly.
Last year, we ended with 32 million fiber subscribers. As we sit here today, we are above 36 million, having closed the Lumen acquisition, and we expect to end this year at over 40 million fiber locations passed. Those locations, coupled with an expansion of our opportunities for fixed wireless, give us an opportunity to drive convergence. Why is it so important to us? We have found that where we have both fiber and wireless, we are number 1 in brand love among consumers and small businesses. We are number 1 or 2 among medium and medium-sized businesses and enterprises. It's our customers love the products when we're able to sell them together, and our opportunity to deliver those products together is growing.
What we are able to do when we have them together is you have customers who typically buy more from us, higher price points, they stay with us longer and allow us to achieve much higher lifetime value. The plays that we have been running, they're gonna be available to us on a much broader basis as you look ahead. I feel really good about where we are, and I think 2025's performance is a good reflection of what we think we're gonna be able to do as you look ahead.
Got it. You know, from an ARPU perspective, just, you know, continuing on that thread for a bit, but when we think about, you know, your change in focus over the last couple of quarters, it seems like the origination cohorts have changed a little bit in terms of where you are focused. What changed from a targeting approach? What changed for the targeting approach to change towards some of the lower-priced cohorts?
Sure thing. When you're running a subscription base the size that we are, you have to have a pretty broad offering. Remember, we start from a place where we have the highest wireless ARPU. In order to grow our service revenue, which is really what our goal has been and will continue to be, you have to broaden out who you appeal to. That doesn't mean you're not able to extract more value from other portions of your overall subscriber base. We've been doing that for some time. Last year, you saw a significant effort to really try to drive growth among value customers, and also converged customers typically come with a service with a bundled discount. Over time, we're gonna be able to drive more value from those customers.
I think it's really important that we differentiate ARPU from pricing. It's possible that our ARPU doesn't grow, but we're still able to drive pricing in parts of our base, and that's what we've been doing, and that's what I would expect us to be able to do as we look ahead.
Got it. Actually, before I ask the next question, I forgot to mention at the start that in case you know, the audience has questions, there's a chat box in front of you. Feel free to type it in, and I'll read it out towards the end. On the mobility business, Pascal, when we think about churn, I mean, that's also been a little elevated, and you've mentioned, a larger than normal proportion of contract roll-offs not being a factor anymore. Is this all because of competition? Do you expect 2026 to be different as you go through the rest of the year in terms of churn or, you know, does it mean revert to some extent?
When I think back to 2025, there were a few factors at play. I think 1, for us, you had a bigger cohort that was coming off contracts. 2, I think immigration clearly had an impact in terms of the number of new subscribers available in the ecosystem. 3, DOGE had an impact not only at the federal level, but many state and local governments had DOGE-like efforts and other institutions, like colleges and university. All those things were at play in 2025. Our planning assumption as we came into 2026, was to assume that many of those still exist.
We're not gonna experience a contract roll-off that we did last year, Kannan, the way I think about it is, given our unique position and our driving convergence, yes, we are planning for a higher level of churn in 2026, but over time, as we drive more and more convergence in our base, it's very clear that converged customers churn less. Over time, we would expect churn to come down as more and more of our base is converged. It, it's one that I think, currently we are planning for that not to be the case in 2026, but over time, it's just a matter of time as we drive more convergence.
Got it. Pulling on that thread for a bit, more on the fiber side, you recently closed on Lumen. How should we think about the timing of the integration process, and how quickly can you ramp the pace of build, and scale this business?
Yeah.
When should we start to see these opportunities, show up?
Yeah. We are quite excited about the Lumen opportunity. We closed in early February, As a reminder, the Lumen business came with over 4 million fiber locations passed. Importantly, those locations passed are only 25% penetrated, we think we have a huge opportunity to ramp up penetration. Also, the convergence in those locations is less than 20%. As a point of comparison, in our own footprint, convergence is over 40%. We think we have a huge opportunity to capitalize on that asset and to really improve penetration and drive additional convergence. It's gonna take some time, through the good work of our legal team, we were able to close this candidly, a little faster than we even thought. Right now, the work that is being done is.
Adding to the distribution in the area to drive more penetration. Adding to things like field tech to ensure that we're able to meet with the higher volumes we expect. All that work is underway, and I would expect, as we make our way through the year, we will be able to get through to a normal operating cadence that we see in our own footprint. Look, it's early days, but I feel really good. The reception about our brand in that in that new footprint has been really positive, and we think that will only grow as we add more and more marketing muscle behind it.
Good.
As it relates to the build, again, it's similar to distribution and penetration that I just talked about. It's gonna take a little bit of time. Lumen has been building less than half a million in each, in its footprint. We expect to ramp that up significantly, just like we've talked about in our own footprint. To do that, it just takes some time. You have to add more resources, you, and the build engine has to scale. We know how to do this. We really do, and it's only a matter of time, and we have every confidence that we're gonna be able to do it, and the AT&T brand will be really accepted well there, and it's gonna be a great acquisition for us.
When you think about, you know, the other aspects of the deal, I mean, you've also mentioned, an equity partner, potentially, as a source of capital in this. I mean, what's the timing around that? Then, as we go forward, will Lumen be broken out in terms of its metrics, in terms of net adds, subs, penetration, so that we can see the underlying performance.
Sure thing. With regard to an equity partner, when we announced the deal, we said it would take us 6-9 months to close on an equity partner. We're in that process right now, and I expect us to be in a position to close sometime in the second half of the year on that. You know, remember, it has to go similar to the acquisition itself, the equity partner, the acquisition of an equity partner has to go through a regulatory review process. That's why it takes that long. We have pretty good line of sight to that process. As it relates to disclosures, rest assured, we're gonna give you visibility in terms of how the asset is performing relative to our expectations.
Got it. I guess just, you know, broadly around this investment theme, John's mentioned that you have capacity on your balance sheet for other strategic options. Do you see future asset acquisitions as an opportunity, especially given that you also have a deleveraging of goal? Then, more broadly, are there other structures possible? I mean, Lumen obviously is one alternative structure. You have Gigafiber and so on. As you think about the underlying asset within your balance sheet, which is pretty big now, are there other structures possible even for that asset base?
Here is the good news about where we are today. We don't need any other asset to execute on our strategy. With the acquisition of the EchoStar spectrum and the Lumen assets, we have clear line of sight to get to over 60 million fiber locations. We have the largest wireless network, that we are in the midst of modernizing, and we expect that process to be largely completed as you get through the next couple of years. And we'll have a really deep spectrum portfolio. We feel really good about where we are. There's not a need to do anything, but as you would expect, You know, it's our responsibility whenever anything comes to market, to evaluate it, to see whether we have an opportunity to generate returns for our owners.
Right now, what is exciting is we don't have to do anything. We have a lot of running room ahead of us without having to do anything inorganically.
Got it. On the fiber side, volume growth is obviously a huge focus for everyone, and you have the goal of 40 million passings this year as well. Cable's also trying to fight harder now, with, you know, back book repricing and, you know, network upgrades, and so on. When you think about, you know, the fiber market more broadly, what's the competitive playbook or your go-to-market strategy, and then in terms of a growth cadence, I mean, should we expect, you know, the push for volumes to lead to an acceleration either on the volume side or the revenue growth side? If you could just talk about broadly the strategic advantages and the path from here, that would be useful.
I think it's worth underscoring the comments I made at the outset. We're at a point right now where our opportunities for incremental fiber subscribers is growing. With the closing of Lumen, we are above 36 million locations passed. This year, we are stepping up our organic build, and we expect to end 2026 at a 4 million build pace annually in our own footprint. We're ramping the Lumen build engine and expect that to be ultimately at 1 million locations. In 2027 and beyond, we expect to be adding 5 million fiber locations each year, and this year, we expect that number to be over 8 million. That gives you a sense for how our opportunity set is growing.
When we are building, we are building in a location that we haven't been before, and we're bringing the AT&T brand, we're bringing the ability to converge. In that instance, cable's the one playing defense. We're playing offense. We're coming in with a better product, we're in a position to offer it at a better price point, and we're able to converge it with wireless, all on our own networks, not having to rent somebody else's network. As I said at the outset, when we have those two products together, we are number one in consumer brand love and NPS, so we feel really good about our position, and I think the question should be: What is cable gonna do about our plans to continuing to expand?
Got it. On fixed wireless, you have been accelerating quite a bit over the last few years. I mean, the industry as a whole has been accelerating quite a bit. Now you have a pretty substantial spectrum portfolio, but we saw a sequential decline in Q4 for the first time in your numbers. How should we think about the long-term trajectory now with your, you know, more expansive spectrum portfolio, and what does the growth opportunity here look like?
Sure thing. I think so just taking a step back, one of the things that we've said we've been doing, and I think it's really worth emphasizing, is we've been modernizing our wireless network. That means literally taking every single tower and putting new radio access technology in it. We've been trying to sequence that process and the rollout of fixed wireless in those territories. That process is still mid-flight, so we haven't even completed the modernization, and as we complete it, more and more opportunities for fixed wireless open up. That's one. Two, as you mentioned, we got through the EchoStar acquisition, pretty attractive spectrum holdings. Those two things are gonna help us expand our opportunity set over the next several years.
With regard to the fourth quarter, I think the fourth quarter, typically, the focus is device offers and other holiday sales. I wouldn't read too much into it. Fixed wireless is a product. Because it's not available nationwide, we haven't really put the AT&T marketing and distribution muscle behind it, so we have every confidence, once we do that, we're gonna be able to drive really attractive returns.
Got it. You've spent about, you know, $30-ish billion on EchoStar and Lumen assets. You haven't shown much accretion benefits in your guidance, as you go through your guidance pre-period into 2028. Could you maybe expand on why it takes so long for these acquisitions to contribute to EBITDA?
Sure, sure thing. With the Lumen assets, right? Let's take those first. They come with a revenue base, they call it, about $900 million. In order to grow that and to drive deeper penetration, we're gonna make pretty substantial investments in driving our distribution and service capabilities in that footprint. Largely, we would expect that to be. It won't have a material impact in year to EBITDA. It will have slightly dilutive impact to interest because we are in to EPS because we are paying interest on the debt. As it relates to EchoStar, it's a very similar story.
As I mentioned, we are in the midst of modernizing all of our towers, and what that's gonna result in is, over time, you know, we expect to complete that modernization by, largely by the end of 2027. What that will do is it will allow us to fully deploy that spectrum. As you can tell from my comments, both whether it's the Lumen assets or the EchoStar, there's a ramping period and investment period that we are gonna undertake over the next couple of years, and we expect that to be largely completed by the time we exit 2027. That's why the accretion is expected to really show up in 2028 in earnest.
What I think is impressive is the fact that we are able to absorb these assets, not change the guides we previously had outstanding. We're still able to deliver that, which speaks to the strength of our underlying business, and these assets will produce really attractive long-term returns for our shareholders. I feel really good about the pace at which we are executing on this, and I think the returns on this will be really attractive for our shareholders.
Got it. During earnings, you also gave us some color on free cash flow and EBITDA for the upcoming quarter. That was a little softer, largely on account of capital investments and cash interest and so on. Could you help us understand, you know, how the cadence for free cash flow plays out rest of the year? How should we think about, you know, any kind of seasonality or any other factors that impact future quarters?
Okay, in terms of quarterly cadence, I think the cadence should be largely consistent with what you've seen in the past. The first half of the year, in particular Q1, there are a couple of things that impacted from a seasonality. Holiday sales, the, and the devices that are paid for in the first quarter, there's always a bit of a headwind to Q1 free cash flow. The annual incentive comp is also paid in Q1. This year, in particular, we are ramping up integration of Lumen. Those are expenses that we didn't have last year. We're also stepping up our capital spending from 2022 to between 2023 and 2024. That's expected to be a headwind.
As we make our way through the year, some of those items no longer persist or those comps ease, you should expect free cash flow to continue to grow as you make your way sequentially. As it relates to the 3-year plan, this year, we expect free cash flow to grow largely as a result of EBITDA growth, lower pension contributions, and last year we had some non-recurring working capital investments, including litigation expenses and wholesale access advances that are not expected to recur. That's gonna be offset by higher capital. As you make your way through the next couple of years, you should expect free cash flow growth to be largely driven by EBITDA growth.
Got it. I guess the other variable is, the cost transformation project. You know, you've talked about $4 billion in new cost savings between 2026-2028. Could you talk about how this relates to, you know, the prior $3 billion goal? I mean, is this incremental? Are you accelerating the timeline? Is there anything new? What are the new components, that you're including, in this?
I think we've done a really nice job the last several years at continuing to transform our cost base. You look at last year, you know, at the end of 2024, we gave a 3-year guidance that said we were gonna reduce, we were gonna save over $3 billion. Last year, we saved over $1 billion, and it's in a variety of areas. third-party costs, the third-party vendors, software, force, access. If you look at our trending schedules that we have on our website, those will show you when you exclude equipment costs and other growth-related expenses. Our cash operating expenses were down last year, and I would expect that trend to continue. We've done a great job on cost.
We're reinvesting a lot of that, those savings, back into growing our customer base, and because we think we have a huge opportunity to do that. The team has done a great job, and I would expect that to continue over the next several years. The $4 billion really is gonna capture 2026-2028. The prior guidance captured 2025-2027.
Got it. In terms of decommissioning, you've obviously talked about this being an opportunity in the coming years. The other part, other side of this is you expect legacy service revenues to decline by over 20% in 2026, and for it to be immaterial by 2029. EBITDA is expected to turn negative in 2027, which means that your revenues are declining at a faster rate than, you know, the costs, the cost opportunities. How should we think about the cadence of cost savings from this front?
Yeah. I think if you look back the last couple of years, our legacy revenues have been declining faster than our costs. That's what's been impressive about our organic performance the last couple of years. With each year that passes, the absolute drag on legacy should diminish. You saw last year, we took out about $1 billion of the costs associated with the legacy business. I would expect that to continue as you make your way through the next several years. I have every confidence that we can manage that process through cost reductions and continued accelerated growth in advanced connectivity.
Got it. You know, we just have a couple of minutes left, so anybody in the audience, if you have questions, please type it into the chat box. Pascal, maybe on the decommissioning side, another question here is, obviously, you know, there's a cost and revenue side of it, but there's also, you know, an asset unlock opportunity here. You have, you know, a lot of real estate potentially in this business. You also have, you know, copper itself, is quite valuable in today's market, and there's a lot of it in the plant. When you think about this opportunity, when should we start seeing some of these, you know, the asset opportunities start to show up? I think some of it has already happened, but it would be great to understand how this plays out in the coming years.
Yeah. You know, look, none of the guides we've provided you, it includes any monetization of real estate.
Yeah
Or monetization of copper, I think the opportunities there are pretty attractive. As we, you know, I think it's important to keep in mind, it was with the CAR FCC that we were able to really start to gain some exit velocity on decommissioning process. We now have approval from the FCC to stop inwards new subscribers onto legacy. That's a big deal for us. We expect by the end of 2026 to be able to stop offering, not only stop offering, but to be able to get out of 30% of our wireline footprint. That's a big deal. As we get out of more and more of that footprint, that's when you should start to see some of these monetization opportunities realize themselves.
We are in really good shape, and I would expect that to only grow as we make our way further into the decommissioning process. I think, with the regulatory environment, there is a tailwind at our back that we didn't have for a long time.
Got it. All right. On that note, Pascal, we're out of time. This was great. Thanks for joining us.
Thank you.
And-
Thank you for having me.
Absolutely. Yeah, we'll see you next time.
Take care.